It's the Word of the Day podcast for February 18th.
Today's word is chutzpah, also pronounced chutzpah and spelled C-H-U-T-Z-P-A-H.
Chutzpah is a noun.
It's A shameless or disrespectful boldness often paired with reckless self-confidence.
Someone with chutzpah dares to do or say things that seem shocking to others.
Here's the word used in a sentence from Vanity Fair by Julie Miller.
Anne Hathaway is not easily talked out of things she believes in.
She took drama classes, understudied future Tony winner Laura Bonanti,
in a production of Jane Eyre at 14,
and had the chutzpah to write to an agent with her headshot at 15.
The word chutzpah has been boldly circulating through English since the mid-1800s.
It comes to English from Yiddish, which in turn took the word from Hebrew.
The C-H in chutzpah indicates a rasping sound from the back of the throat that exists in many languages,
including Yiddish.
That sound is not part of English phonology,
so it follows that the C is sometimes dropped in both the pronunciation and the spelling of the word.
Some speakers of Yiddish feel that Hutzpah has been diluted in English use,
no longer properly conveying the monumental nature of the Gaul that is implied.
A classic example can be found in Leo Rothstein's 1968 book,
The Joys of Yiddish, which defines Chutzpah as that quality enshrined in a man who,